I’ve been absent from this blog for far too long now, and
while a great deal of the reason for that can be blamed on the busy-ness of
this past quarter, the explanation for the past month or so of blog absence
lies more in the realm of academic self-contemplation and consideration. Part
of the focus of the past quarter has been on developing the ideas and committee
for my dissertation. (It appears that part of that has, in fact, been getting
used to talking about my “dissertation,” which is such a scary word that, until
a few months ago, I primarily referred to it as my “project.”) While a later
post will start to get into the nitty-gritties of my topic, and what I’m
interested in spending the next few years of my life researching, in this one I
want to talk mostly about where I’ll be taking this blog in the future, and
how, actually, it will start to relate more directly to my academic endeavors.
This blog started out as a bit of an adult re-imagining of
the LiveJournal my friends and I used so earnestly and often in high school – a
way to communicate to those both near and far my monthly (or, as was more often
the case, tri-annual) pontifications on life as a grad student, as a
20-something, as a single woman, in the 21st century. And while I
don’t regret or find any of my older posts to be without value, it’s time now
for me to turn this blog into an extension of, and support for, my academic
research. Inspired by the blogs of other members of the community, in
particular of some of my grad student colleagues at UCSB, I want to start using
this space to talk about things I read in the process of my research, ideas I’m
thinking of working into my writing, conferences I attend, and other topics
that are much more germane to my studies than going to see the Glee concert
movie. (OK, so maybe I fibbed a little about not regretting any of my previous
posts.) I hope that, by taking the blog in this direction, I can help clarify
my own thoughts for myself, as well as communicate them to and open up
discussion with others in the academic scene. I hope my readers (especially if
there are any of you other than my parents and my grandfather) will enjoy my
more scholarly reflections.
That all being said, I will not be sharing with you all the
list of books I read for pleasure this year (in part, I must confess, because
the list is embarrassingly short, thanks to the vast amounts of reading I did
for my MA exam in June). However, I will share with you this story: this winter
break, I did something I’d never done before, and I think that it, along with
the new direction of the blog, reflects a – somewhat frightening – maturation
on my part: I started reading an academic book for no reason other than I
thought it would be interesting and, at least in part, pertinent to my
research. The book is Helen Cooper’s Shakespeare
and the Medieval World, and while I’m still less than a third of the way
in, I’m finding it quite interesting and thought-provoking. I hope to return to
it in a later post, but for now, let’s just marvel at the fact that I’m now one
of those people – the people who read
scholarly texts for fun.
With that, my dear readers, I leave you for 2012. Have a
happy new year, and I’ll see you in 2013!
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